AZ’s Perk Awarding/Removing Batch v1.0
Important note for those with slow internet or datacaps
This file WILL remove the official high res textures DLC. When I do have time to update it I will excluded that file from deletion. Important News Section
Note: This file only works on windows. Note: Safeguard for opening outside the folder is in place. Please take caution when opening it though or your computer might get mauled by a deathclaw. What is this? This is a small batch file designed to send your mods in the void. All files deleted by this mod are not supported to be recovered meaning you will need to redownload them. If you do not know how to get to the source code then you should not be concerned with it. Installing + Using The file now operates from the area of the file where the Fallout 4 exe is. Just drag and drop del.bat into your Fallout 4 folder and run it. Just press Y when prompted to and you will have the folders restored to their default state. This now requires two pushes of the Y key and more may be needed in the future for future files. FAQ This section covers a few questions that you may have when using the file. Q: I installed a mod that has a folder and when I run the batch file it does not remove it, what do I do? A: Make sure you are using the most updated version and if something is not working right send me a link to the mod that won't die and what is being leftover. Q: I'm running linux/mac/osthatnooneknowsabout what can't I open this? A: Though many hours of wizard spells using my bullet spraying wand I have made this file not work on everything but windows mwhahahaha. Nah but this uses a program that only works on windows, aka command prompt, so if you want to make this work on another OS just drop credit where it be due or I will delete you. Q: Are you a wizard? A: I might be ![]() Thanks Thanks for downloading my batch file and happy ((un)(re))modding. Changes ![]() -- Re-worked some of the description to clarify things a little bit. 2015 - Nov - 19 -- Re-worked the batch file to include fail safe code. It now looks for the Fallout4.esm file and will not run without it but you should still not run it outside the data folder. -- Fixed a typo causing a small file to be deleted(editing error). Really really really sorry if this happened to anyone(it was the Misc.ba2 file if it happened to anyone). 2016 - Jan - 12 -- Re-worked the batch file to remove any empty folders. This will not remove any folders for mods the have stuff inside them. Working on a way to remove any unfamiliar folders but school is taking up a bit of my time. -- Changed the message that told you stuff was clean. -- Deleted an old version that was potentially harmful to the users computer if used improperly. Please download the most recent version (mod.push) for all the latest and greatest mod killing features. 2016 - Jan - 14 -- I'm on fire, someone get a bucket of water...... really no one is going to get me a bucket of water :( Fine I'll just make my file now remove all of your mods folders that make the game look and sound different. Really though I just added the function to the file to remove the following folders. ----textures ----sound ----meshes ----fomod(please tell me if this is unhelpful) ----materials 2016 - Feb - 18 -- Since you guys just let me burn to death last time I'm going to make this mod delete even more of your game. Now it will remove all of your lights and fancy effects using sweetfx and enb mwahahaha. 2016 - Feb - 24 -- Still recovering from those burns you guys just let me get. All I could do this time is update the main page with sad news. Thanks for using my mod and I hope is provides ever growing power for you in the future. 2017 - Nov - 7 ![]() -- It's nice you want to read the changelog but another settlement is in need of help -- Added map marker for another settlement 2016 - April - 20 -- I'm not internet dead anymore like the Feb news said, new version of the mod is out, enjoy my loyal minio... uh I mean wonderful fans. 2016 - May - 17 -- Removed legacy versions - Will provide links to download upon request(will not provide support to problems with those files) -- Updated to support the following DLC - Automatron - Wasteland Workshop - Far Harbor 2016 - Nov - 22 -- Added support for all 6 DLC - If this break the vanilla game please leave a comment telling me what DLC it broke. Plans N/A
These Bat files will Give/Remove all the Perks [MOST] available in Fallout 4.
It Also Includes Most of the Magazines & Pip-Boy Holo Games. It also Gives/Removes Override Programms.
As the S.P.E.C.I.A.L Perks can’t Be Awared/Removed using this Consol Method,
Your Level Will Be Set to “Level 45”. & then You can Increase Your S.P.E.C.I.A.L Perks in Pip-Boy. Then You Can’t Decrease Your Level After Increasing it Once. Have Fun..
PerksAdd = Award You With All Perks PerksRemove = Remove all Your Perks [Not S.P.E.C.I.A.L] ———————————- Instructions: ———————————- 1. Download File. 2. Extract File in Main Game Folder which is where the Fallout4.exe is. 3. Start Game. 4. Open Consol. [If you Don’t know How to Open Consol, Search it in Google.] [Mostly The ~ key is Used, The One which is Up to the TAB key & Below The ESC Key ] 5. Type “BAT FileName” [ Without “” ] [ FileName = The File Name Which You Extracted ] 6. Press ENTER. 7. DONE. Must Try It
Like many Bethesda games, modding is one of the big draws of games like Skyrim and Fallout 4 on the PC. Nexus Mod Manager is one of the best ways to install mods on your favorite games, and we’re here to show you how to use it.
Nexus Mod Manager actually supports many other games, too, including The Witcher games, Dragon Age, Dark Souls, and other Fallout and Elder Scrolls games, so you should be able to adapt the instructions for any other game Nexus Mod Manager supports. We’ll use Fallout 4 in today’s example.
How to Enable Modding in Fallout 4
Even though you’ll be using the Nexus Mod Manager, you’ll still have to perform a quick tweak to Fallout 4’s game files before it will accept the mods you install. (Other games, like Skyrim, won’t require this tweak, and you can skip to the next section).
First, navigate to the Fallout 4 folder in your documents directory. You’ll find it under
C:UsersYOURNAMEDocumentsMy GamesFallout4 .
How To Delete All Mods From Fallout 4 Cheats
Double-click the
Fallout4Prefs.ini file to open it in your default text editor. It’ll open in Windows Notepad unless you’ve installed another text editor like Notepad++.
Scroll down to the very bottom of the text file and you’ll see a
[Launcher] section. Add the following line below it:
Click File>Save to save the file, and then close Notepad.
Double-click the
Fallout4Custom.ini file to open it in your default text editor. Add the following lines to the end of the file:
Click File > Save to save the file, and then close Notepad. Fallout 4 will now accept and use the mods you install.
How to Install and Configure Nexus Mod Manager
It’s possible to manually install mods for a lot of games, or use Steam’s built-in Workshop (for games that support it). However, we recommend using the Nexus Mod Manager tool to make this process easier and reduce the risk you’ll break something while installing a mod.
Download Nexus Mod Manager and install it on your PC. If you don’t yet have a Nexus Mods account, you’ll be informed you need to register for a free account to download it. You’ll be asked to sign up for a paid supporter membership during the sign-up process, but you can just scroll down to the bottom of the page and click “Create Account” to continue.
Launch Nexus Mod Manager after you install it and it will search your PC for games. If you have Fallout 4 installed, it will find it. Just click the checkmark to confirm Fallout 4 is installed at that location and then click “OK.”
Select “Fallout 4” in the list of installed games and click “OK.” If you always want to use this program to manage Fallout 4 mods, click the “Don’t ask me next time” checkbox here.
You’ll be informed that you need to set up the paths where Nexus Mod Manager will store mod-related files. Click “OK” to continue and you’ll see a Fallout 4 Setup screen. By default, Nexus Mod Manager will store these files under
C:GamesNexus Mod ManagerFallout4 .
There’s a problem with these default folder settings. It won’t work unless you run Nexus Mod Manager as Administrator. If you run it normally, you’ll see an error informing you that Nexus Mod Manager is “unable to get write permissions for” the directory.
To solve this, set the folder paths to something like
C:UsersYOURNAMEDocumentsNexus Mod ManagerFallout4 . Alternatively, keep the default folders and run Nexus Mod Manager as an Administrator. To do so, right-click the Nexus Mod Manager shortcut and select “Run as administrator.”
To always run it as Administrator, right-click the shortcut and select “Open file location.” Right-click the “Nexus Mod Manager” Shortcut, select “Properties, click the “Compatability” tab, and enable the “Run this program as an administrator” checkbox. Click “OK” to save your settings and Windows will always launch Nexus Mod Manager with Administrator permissions.
How to Install Fallout 4 Mods
You’ll want to sign into Nexus Mod Manager with your Nexus account for easy mod installation. To do so, click the profile icon next to “You are not logged in” at the bottom-left corner of the Nexus Mod Manager window. Enter your Nexus Mods username and password here.
You’ll then see a “Logged in” message here, informing you you’re logged in.
You can now head to the Fallout 4 Mods category page to browse and search the available mods. If you’re logged in, you’ll see “[Name]’s account” at the top-right corner of each web page. If you’re not, click the “Log in” link at the top-right corner of the web page.
Locate a mod you want to install and click the “Download (NMM)” button to download the mod with Nexus Mod Manager. Your browser will hand off to the Nexus Mod Manager application, which will download the mod you chose.
The Download link at the top of each mod’s page will download the main, current version of the mod. However, some mods offer multiple versions, or additional files.
To download multiple versions or optional files a mod offers, scroll down on its download page and click the “Files” tab. You’ll see the various files the mod offers, along with explanations from the mod author about what they do. Click “Download With Manager” to download the mod files you want.
Once it’s downloaded and installed, locate the mod in the list, select it, and click the green checkmark button in the sidebar to enable it. You can click the red cancel button that appears in this location afterwards to disable a mod.
Some mods will walk you through a setup process the first time you enable them. You’ll be able to choose different options, depending on the mod. Go through the setup process and select your desired options to enable the mod.
To change these options later, right-click the mod in the Nexus Mod Manager list and select “Reinstall Mod.” You’ll see the same setup screens again.
Now all you need to do is launch Fallout 4. You can do so using the “Launch Fallout4” button at the top-left corner of the screen or just launch it through Steam normally. Load your existing game or create a new one–either way, the mods you installed will immediately take effect.
To disable or uninstall a mod later, close Fallout 4 and open Nexus Mod Manager. Right-click the mod you want to disable or uninstall and select “Deactivate” to disable the mod or “Uninstall and Delete” to remove the mod from your system.
You can also click the settings icon at the top of the Nexus Mod Manager window and use the “Disable All Active Mods” or “Uninstall All Active Mods” options to quickly disable or uninstall all currently activate mods.
How to Configure Your Mod Load Order (and Why It Matters)
The above process should work perfectly if you’re only using one mod. However, if you plan to install several mods, you may need to think about your mod load order.
This is exactly what it sounds like. Fallout 4 will load mods one by one, in the order you specify.
If you have multiple mods installed, some of them may overwrite each other’s changes. For example, you may have one “total overhaul mod” that tweaks a large amount of things in the game, including all the weapons. Second, you may have a small mod that makes a single weapon function in a certain way. If the game loads the small mod before the larger mod, its tweaks will be overwritten by the total overhaul mod. To have the second mod function, the larger total overhaul mod needs to be loaded first.
Delete All Mods Fallout 4
This only applies to mods that have plugins. If you install a mod with a plugin, it’ll appear on the “Plugins” tab, as well as the “Mods” tab. To control the load order, click over to the “Plugins” tab. Select a mod you’ve installed and click the up and down arrows in the left pane to adjust the load order. The “Masters” information for a plugin tells you when a mod depends on another mod. For example, in the screenshot below, “Homemaker – SK Integration Patch.esp” depends on Fallout4.esm, SettlementKeywords.esm, and Homemaker.esm. It must appear after all these other plugins in the list. Nexus Mod Manager won’t let you move it above those other plugins in your load order.
It may take some trial and error to get the load order working the way you want it. Some mod authors may provide information about recommended load order on their mod’s download page.
If you want some additional help, you can try using LOOT, the Load Order Optimization tool. It works by examining your mods and attempting to decide the correct order so that all dependencies are satisfied and that each mod has a maximum impact on your game. It will recommend you a load order you can configure in Nexus Mod Manager.
How to Deal With Mod Conflicts, or “Overwrites”
There’s another way mods can conflict, and it’s totally separate from your plug-in load order. Sometimes, two mods overwrite the same files in your game, and you’ll need to decide which one you want to take precedence. We’ll use Skyrim here as an example. Skyrim and Fallout 4 share the same engine, and work similarly.
Texture packs are a great example of this. For example, the Skyrim HD mod adds over 2,000 high-res textures to the game, making it look absolutely fantastic. But there are also smaller mods for specific textures–like this Real Ice and Snow mod–that (sometimes) look even better. Let’s say you want to replace most of your game with the Skyrim HD pack, but want the ice and snow from the Real Ice and Snow mod.
First, you select the Skyrim HD mod and enable it, just like you would any other mod. If you start the game at this point, you’d see that the Skyrim HD textures have been applied. Then, when you enable the Real Ice and Snow mod, you’ll get this message:
This happens because you have two mods–Skyrim HD and Real Ice and Snow–attempting to modify Skyrim’s snow and ice textures. If you want Real Ice and Snow, you’ll click “Yes to All” or “Yes to Mod” to overwrite Skyrim HD’s textures. If you prefer Skyrim HD’s textures, you’d click “No to All” or “No to Mod”, and any conflicting textures from Real Ice and Snow would not be applied.
You could load these mods in the opposite order, too. If you loaded Real Ice and Snow first, you’d get the ice from that mod, and decide whether to overwrite it with Skyrim HD after the fact.
If you’re installing a lot of mods, we recommend loading the bigger, game-sweeping mods first as your “base layer”–in the example above, that’s Skyrim HD. Then, load the smaller, more specific mods after, always choosing “Yes to All.”
The more mods you install, the more complex the process becomes, and we’ve only scratched the surface here–there are many mods that require even more steps outside of Nexus Mod Manager to work (like ENBs or interface modifications). But the more you do it, the more it’ll become second nature. If you ever have questions, check the Discussion tab on the offending mod’s Nexus page–there’s a lot of good info to be had, and developers are often pretty responsive.
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Everyone knows that Bethesda's games have a gazillion or so nude mods on the PC, from bizarro festish mods to full on hardcore sex scenes crafted through the Lovers Lab.
When mods finally came to console owners, the big question was... how do Xbox One and PS4 players get in on the nude wasteland action? Obviously Bethesda, Sony, and Microsoft aren't super keen on that being the focus of console mods, so they aren't officially supported.
Most of the NSFW Xbox One Fallout 4 mods are very much in the PG-13 to soft R area, mostly just upping the scantily clad or sexy quotients. In the slides ahead we do list quite a few of those that just offer some eye-popping cleavage or a few extra inches of skin, as those slide just under the rules and are readily available to download.
That's not all that's available though. Yes, there are real, legitimate, actual fully nude Fallout 4 mods on the Xbox One, and and in the very next slide we show you how to find them!
The Real Deal: Nude Xbox One Fallout 4 Mods
Yep, they exist, and yep, you can download them. Here's the thing: you can't search for these ones through the mod list directly.
Posting up something obviously called a 'nude mod' in the Clothing or Texture category is a surefire way to get it taken down immediately... but if you know where to look, they absolutely do exist -- and are even found directly on Bethesda's website.
Head to the Work In Progress folder here at Bethesda's Fallout 4 mods page and search through them manually for anything with no photo gallery and no description. If you see something with an odd name like Cool3!~ you can bet you're on the right track.
You'd best download those you find now, because its a good bet even these stealthy ones will get swatted down eventually. Here's the thing though... at this point it appears that even if Bethesda yanks a mod from the site, the files themselves remain on your console unless you choose to delete them -- so you can keep deleted mods forever.
How To Delete All Mods From Fallout 4 Ps4Unzipped Vault Suits
Sorry, no full nude stuff here (go back a slide!). Instead this one just takes existing outfits and makes them a little more alluring. The Unzipped mod lets you choose varying levels of just how much you want to reveal, all the way down to the belly button. I never thought of the Fallout vault uniforms as sexy before -- but thanks to some intrepid modders, I've learned that anything's possible.
Sexy Lingerie
You've got to laugh at any patch notes that include a phrase like 'Reduced pantie coverage, smoothed rib cab and butt texture.'
Forgoing the typical body replacers meant to expose as much skin as possible, this one throws characters across the Commonwealth into outfits straight out of a Victoria's Secret commercial. For those wondering... yes, there's a male version to be downloaded as well, if that's your thing.
Blue Lace Underwear
This one's basically the sexy lingerie mod... but with as little surface area as possible. We're almost in Watch Dogs 2 upskirt territory here. This particular mod affects all female characters everywhere (with a hilarious note from the modder about skipping ghouls, for obvious reasons), which makes Fallout 4 a very different experience.
EVB Standard Underwear
Hitting up the Clothing or Texture folders on the Bethesda mods site will reveal a horde of body and underwear replacers/enhancers. Scroll through and have fun, because there's something for everyone.
You'll note that this one seems to have a bit more of a focus on the male, um, 'package,' and tints the female underwear to the point that you almost don't even notice they are wearing any.
Enhanced Vanilla Body With Immersive Underwear
Another body enhancer that changes up the under garments, this is the mod if you need your undies to be more post-apocalyptically themed. Someone was clearly reading a whole lot of Grognak the Barbarian before deciding to become a fashion designer! Grab a sword and run across the wasteland yelling about the lamentation of your enemy's women in your best Ahhhhnold accent!
Strapless Underwear
There's a lot you can get away with in reducing the coverage of underwear before actually being nude, and mods like this push that envelope about as far as they can go. Adding a few more inches of skin, these mods take out the straps from bras and undies, and also lower them to the nipple level.
Shirtless Outfits
Somewhat similar to the unzipped vault uniforms mod, this one takes existing outfits but just culls out the shirts, so you can run around showing off cleavage without having to get rid of the rest of your clothes.
There are actually several different mods for each kind of outfit, and some that will replace everyone's textures wearing that outfit across the whole Commonwealth, while others only change the Sole Survivor's outfit if you craft it yourself.
Armored Underwear
There's a conundrum with your average scantily clad or fully nude mod -- yeah, you get to see lots of mostly or fully naked people... but you also leave yourself vulnerable in combat to getting ganked by raiders and super mutants.
That little issue is resolved with mods like Armored Underwear, which lets you craft your own damage-resistant undies in any of a variety of fun colors. Its like chainmail bikinis for the sci-fi crowd!
Busty EV Body Replacer
The equivalent of the 'sex appeal' slider from Saints Row IV, we cap off this list of NSFW Xbox One Fallout 4 mods with a body replacer that will increase female bust size till the buttons are practically popping off! It works with a quite a few other mods as well, so mix and match and see what crazy things happen.
So there you have it -- a handful of real Fallout 4 nude mods and a horde of skimpy outfits that skirt the line are all available for the console players!
What did you think of our picks, and did you get in on the real deal mods before they were deleted? There's even more sexy time to be had in the wasteland than what we listed here, though. If you can't get enough, be sure to also check out:
Published Aug. 16th 2017
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